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Christmas 2021 - “What do you want?"
 

Did you make a list of what you wanted for Christmas?

If you made a list, raise your hand?

Why did you make a list?

Those who love you asked you to make a list because they want to give you what you want.  They want to hear what you want.  So we have to ask ourselves: “What do I want?”  Then we write it down or have somebody else write it down for us.  We express our desire.

What happens when we do that  - when we tell others what we want?  There is an expectation that someone will listen to us and answer us - give us what we want.

We become eager for that day when we will receive the gift.  We look forward with joyful hope that we will get what we want - that our expectation will be fulfilled.  It is like a promise has been placed in our heart that there will be a present for me.

Your parents will tell you that the hardest person to shop for - to get a present for - is the person who says, “I don’t need anything.  I don’t want anything.  Anything will be OK.  Whatever you get me is fine.”  Those of us who want to give them a gift find that very frustrating.  And often, when we get them something, even if we’ve put a lot of thought and effort into getting it, they usually don’t see it.  It may be the “perfect” gift - a great benefit to them - but not capture their interest in the least.  “That’s nice” they say, and it is put on a shelf in the basement or in the closet.  Why didn’t they recognize the value of the gift and the love of the gift giver?  Because they never asked themselves or expressed what it is that they really wanted. 

          So you have to ask and listen to your heart, “What is it that I want?”,  and let others know.  If we are not asking ourselves the question, we will not recognize the answer - see the gift and how good it is when it is right before our eyes.

          All of the readings from the Old Testament express humanity’s need for a savior.  They express the longing of God’s people for a savior  - what they want.  And within that desire is the expectation of fulfillment - the promise of fulfillment.  The role of the prophet is to awaken that desire in us - to get us to ask for what we need.  And to keep on asking until that promise is fulfilled.

          The birth of Jesus that we celebrate at Christmas is the reminder that God keeps his promises, and he does it in unexpected ways.  Jesus is the answer to our heart’s desire.  What we desire is something we cannot give ourselves because what we desire is greater than this world - beyond this world.  We have a desire for eternal life.  So the only way that desire can be fulfilled is if God comes to us.  What we celebrate at Christmas is that God has come  - the Eternal Word of the Father has taken flesh and has made his dwelling among us.  God has entered our history and has made himself part of our history.  It is not by human generation that the savior comes but by God’s intervention.  We cannot save ourselves.  It is through the Holy Spirit that the child is conceived - through Mary who was perfectly prepared by God to receive him.  Of her was born Jesus who is called the Christ.  This is the message to St. Joseph who, responding in faith, goes forward and follows what the Lord says because of the promise that “God is with us” - that God is “Emmanuel”.  The baby Jesus looked like any other baby - there was nothing different in his appearance, but Joseph recognized that what was beyond this world was present to him in this world.  So he was eager to see how the promise would be fulfilled in this child. 

          Last Sunday, my family gathered at my Aunt Marie and Uncle Joe’s house for the traditional Italian 7 fish dinner.  They are retired, live by themselves, and have a little artificial tree decorating their living room.  There were several wrapped presents under the tree.  The presents weren’t marked - no tags or labels.  My nephew Hugo, who is 8 years old, kept asking, “Aunt Marie, can I open the presents?”  He kept asking, “Are the presents for me?”  Everybody else was telling him to be quiet.  “This is not your home.  Sit down and be quiet.  Just drop it.”  But he kept asking.  “Can I open the presents?  Are the presents for me?”  After dinner, my aunt let him open the presents, and they were for him! 

          I was amazed at the desire of my nephew - how he wasn’t afraid to ask and how he asked with the expectation  - almost a certainty - that there was a gift there for him - even if appearances or the circumstances would indicate otherwise.  There was an eagerness on his part to discover the gift waiting for him, and he persisted in his asking.  Is he a crazy little boy, or is his way of looking at things filled with hope a better and more realistic way to face our circumstances and find our fulfillment?

          The fact that God has come to dwell among us in the flesh - in our human condition - that he has entered our history and remains with us and has redeemed us and our circumstances - means that fulfillment is possible for all who seek him and ask.  He is present, and a gift is waiting for us if we have the heart of a child.  May we be open to his presence and not be afraid to ask.  For only by asking will we receive; only if we seek will we find and open what will bring us great joy.  May God bless you!